Join me in support of WHY I LOVE HORROR (updated as events are added)

Why I Love Horror: The Book Tour-- Coming to a Library and a Computer and a Podcast Near You [Updated Jan 2026]

RA FOR ALL...THE ROAD SHOW!

I can come to your library, book club meeting, or conference to talk about how to help your readers find their next good read. Click here for more information including RA for All's EDI Statement and info about WHY I LOVE HORROR.

Monday, July 6, 2026

NoveList Introduces Readers' Advisory Competencies

Just before the ALA conference, NoveList released something very exciting and 100% free: RA Competencies. From the Introduction on the about page:

Introduction 

Modern readers’ advisory is a relationship driven practice that positions every library staff member as a catalyst for patrons’ deeper engagement with reading and with the library. These competencies describe the art and practice of readers’ advisory and define a shared commitment to it. By intentionally building a culture of advisory services, libraries elevate the patron experience, strengthen their communities, and deliver an impact that lasts far beyond a single interaction. We hope libraries everywhere will use this framework to ensure that helping readers find stories that matter to them remains an essential and visible part of library service. 

I have been very excited for these competencies to be released because I was asked to participate but had to pass as the timeline overlapped with the issue of Library Trends I am guest editing with Robin (speaking of, the articles are all turned in, more on that soon). Doing both was not an option. However, a lot of great people who I respect and trust were involved, and what they have created is amazing (and that is not an exaggeration). And today, I am, very excited to share this work (with permission) with all of you.

There are two main pages here. The first is the competencies themselves. From that page's overview:

Readers' Advisory Competencies 

May 2026

These competencies are intended to:

  • Support individual professional growth
  • Guide organizational training and expectations
  • Provide a shared vocabulary for readers’ advisory work  

Local contexts vary widely, and these competencies are not intended as a rigid template. Individuals and/or libraries should adapt competencies to reflect their unique needs and organizational structure. For example, a staff member whose work is primarily with young children might think about ways that the relational advisory competency can be adapted to conversations with caregivers, or how the story knowledge competency can be centered on early literacy reading. 

Introduction

Modern readers’ advisory is a relationship driven practice that positions every library staff member as a catalyst for patrons’ deeper engagement with reading and with the library. This document outlines the core competencies with levels of expertise that support this approach, offering clear guidance for training pathways, performance expectations, and organizational practices that make readers’ advisory genuinely part of everyone’s role. When libraries inspire and nurture a lifelong love of reading, they lay out the groundwork for a community with stronger critical thinking, greater empathy, and more active civic participation. By intentionally building a culture of advisory services, libraries elevate the patron experience, strengthen their communities, and deliver an impact that lasts far beyond a single interaction. 

Overview of Skill Levels

Three skill levels describe how proficiency scales across each competency area, ranging from essential daily practice to high-level strategic expertise. These levels help identify the specific competencies required for professional development.

  • Core level: Demonstrates foundational knowledge and skills, performs core tasks consistently, and uses established processes and tools. This level is about awareness and participation. It is the level that would be appropriate for all staff.
  • Advanced level: Independently handles complex situations; develops new processes; improves local practice; and mentors peers. This level is about regular application and improvement. It would be appropriate for staff who regularly provide advisory services or have dedicated advisory roles.
  • Expert level: Shapes strategy, practice, and culture; trains others; evaluates impact; and drives innovation. This level is about leadership. It is the level that would be appropriate for anyone deeply involved in RA as a profession, whether in a supervisory or non-supervisory position.

Competency Areas

Eight competency areas define the foundational domains of knowledge and practice that shape effective advisory work. Together, they represent the core capabilities libraries want to cultivate to deliver high-quality, reader-centered experiences for all patrons. The eight competency areas are designed as complementary, interdependent practices that collectively comprise advisory work, rather than standalone or optional skill sets. 

This tells you what you can expect. Now click through and look at the 8 competencies. You can access each with their drop down menus to see what is "core," "advanced," and "expert." This resource is clear and easy to understand. I especially appreciate the 3 tiered breakdown because the "core" competencies are things I already expect and teach as things that ALL public library staff should be able to do and then the next tiers are to build off of for key staff. 

These competencies are completely free to use to train your staff and I for one am so excited that there is another free resource for basic RA training information other than this blog. As I said above, I trust this document 100% because the external advisors are people I trust. From this competencies page those people are:

External advisors:

  • Stephanie Chase, Executive Director, Libraries of Eastern Oregon  
  • Lucy Donnelly, Kansas City Public Library, Readers’ Services Librarian  
  • Autumn Friedli, Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library, Program Services Coordinator  
  • Lynn Lobash, New York Public Library, Associate Director, Readers’ Services  
  • Dodie Ownes, Denver Public Library, Adult Services Librarian  
  • Michael Santangelo, BookOps, Director, Collections Management  
  • erin sladen, Denver Public Library, Advisory Services Program Manager  
  • Duncan Smith, Retired Co-founder of NoveList
  • Kaite Stover, Kansas City Public Library, Director of Readers’ Services  
  • Steph Topping, Niagara Falls Public Library (ON), Information, Resources, & Connections Leader  
  • Barry Trott, Library of Virginia, Adult Services Consultant  
  • Rebecca Vnuk, LibraryReads, Executive Director

The second page of this document is titled "Recommend Learning Resources." It has a comprehensive list of a variety of resources. Please book mark that page ASAP. 

There is also a PDF version of everything as well. You can print it out and share with your staff.

I will be adding this entire document to my 10 Rules of Basic RA Service so that everyone can have access to it at all times. 

Thank you to everyone who worked on these competencies. It has been a long time since RA practitioners have gotten together to talk about what we do, how we do it, and best practices. It is extremely appreciated by us all.

I purposely waited until after ALA and the July 4th holiday to highlight these NoveList Readers/ Advisory Competencies to ensure I got the maximum number of eyes on it. This is now the GO TO resource for how to best serve our readers through the public library. Thank you to NoveList for doing the work to create it and keeping the document itself free for all.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

2026 Horror Books Preview Part 2 with Backlist Access and a Chance to See me and John Langan Live in NH later This Month

July always marks the beginning of spooky season for me because this is the month when I switch into overtime. Why so early?

Well, as you will see next week, because my reviews for upcoming horror need to be to Booklist 2 months before they run in the print combined with the fact that September and October have the most horror titles, all of this means July is when many of those reviews start appearing. So many that I will have 2 posts highlighting my 7 horror reviews in the July 2026 issue of Library Journal.

July is also the month when Library Journal runs the Horror Genre Preview article I write for them every year. Again, I will be posting that and writing more about it next week as well.

And there is one more thing that comes out around this time, part two of the preview podcasts I do with Robb Olson and Emily Hughes on Robb's ARC Party podcasts. So now you can see why my Spooky Season begin July 1. 

At the end of June,  I made what has become an 2x a year appearance on ARC Party with Robb Olson and Emily Hughes. This time we did the July-December 2026 Horror Preview. You can watch and/or listen here. That link incudes time stamps to each book if you want to skip around.

We have been doing these in December and June every year since December 2024, previewing the entire year in 2 epic podcasts where we each highlight 2 books per month for 6 months.

Robb made this amazing playlist of all 6 existing podcasts so you can pursue them all. And without my prompting Robb did this and said it is because these books don't have a shelf life, you can read them anytime. 

My backlist promoting librarian heart was filled with joy when he made this comment. He is 100% correct. And if you pair our previews with Emily Hughes' much more comprehensive lists, you get a very full picture of the horror genre over the last 6 years.

Emily's lists are always accessible-- current and backlist going back to 2020-- here. From that link you can break things down by year and even month.

Emily's lists should be your first stop for all of your horror collection development needs. What you should order ahead of time. What you missed that you can go back and add. There is even some readalike information in there with titles including annotations and comps. 

We love bringing you this episode 2x a year. It is a good amount of work but we all know it is worth it. It highlights Emily's work while also shining a spotlight on the horror genre specifically. 

Take a peek at the list for 2026 and give our most current podcast a listen or visit the playlist of all 6 episodes and use it all to help you plan to help your horror readers anytime of year. You can also watch on the embedded video below.

Flier for the event on July 31st at Gibson's Books in Concord NH with me and John Langan. Click on the image for more details
In the episode I mention an event at Gibson's Books in Concord, NH on July 31st with me and John Langan. Click here for all of the details and to register yourself. I hope to see some of you there

That's all for this week, shortened at its start by ALA and at its end by the 4th of July holiday, but I am back on a regular schedule for the first time in a month next week with no plans to be off from blogging until the end of August.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

ALA 2026: Wrap Up Post 2 of 2 (the Becky's Rant Version)

Back for day two of Becky's wrap up, but I do think after the holiday, I may come back with other people's  roundups as well. 

But right now, you can follow PW's libraries reporter who has Day 1 and 2 reports up now. But if you use the link I provided for all their library news, you can follow more as it is published.

I am going to address the opening and closing sessions in a moment, but first, I want to begin with some o fly observations from the Exhibit Floor.

  • The book stages were not a factor this year. At least to me. Look, they were there but unlike last year, I did not hear them or see people flocking to them. People were talking about the stages last year. And I am not surprised because a few months before ALA I was talking with the publishers who had me do moderating on this stages and all of them said they had nothing there this year. I thought they were just trying to get rid of me, but then I looked at the schedules and honestly, they were mostly publishers doing buzzes or stuff for YS librarians. So maybe your experience is different but I 100% did not factor them into my plans this year, and again, the last few years, I was at those stages more than ever.
  • I did not think there were as many big name authors there this year-- at least for adults. Don't get me wrong, there were huge people like John Scalzi and Tananarive Due, but the number of big name authors was down. But again, librarian, my experience may not be anything more than my experience. So I started to ask a variety of people who are bringing the authors in (leaving names and affiliations out but these are top people), and they told me that when the conference people reached out for names of authors, the ones that were chosen to appear were surprising to them. And it seems like there were few options for the people hosting the author panels via United For Libraries and LibraryReads as well. Again, at least for the adult side. The number of kid lit and teen authors was much higher.
  • I was heartened to see that the comics and graphic novelists authors were higher and more on point this year though. That is a win.
  • And the most noticeable but least surprising thing I learned on the exhibit floor was the number of vendors and even publishers who are all flocking to fill the B&T gap. Ingram could not step in and do everything-- obviously. B&T, for all of their issues, was a stalwart for libraries for delivering the highest number of processed books, uniquely tailored to your libraries call number and sticker placement quirks as well as the best provider of standing order authors. They developed these services over decades. What I saw was interesting. First publishers like PRH are trying to fill the ordering and inventory gaps by now allowing libraries to order directly from them with a cart system that we are used to. But second, and more interesting, I saw a variety of vendors offering parts of what B&T offered, no one offering everything, but pieces. For example, Amazon now will send your books to you from their new library ordering portal with mylar covers. They also are going to roll out a standing author program and there are people talking about Amazon leveraging their customer data to help libraries understand what books are most popular in their zip codes. Follett is also ramping up their services for public libraries. I have worked with Follett on ordering and cataloging through their school library linked systems for years as I have volunteered at the school library, but they are now saying they will be able to offer processed books and catalog records that will upload into systems that are not theirs. I also ran into many former B&T employees who are at many of the vendors and are sharing their knowledge with their new companies. My overall assessment of everything I saw (and I have only shared a few things), all of these promises and new services are going to take a few years to ramp up. In the meantime, we are all going to continue to struggle to get books on the shelf. Talking to librarians from all over the country, most are making due by hiring a few new people to process and teaching library associates how to do copy cataloging and processing as a job ON TOP of their other duties to make due. 

Again, those are my brief overview thoughts from the exhibit floor, but now I want to talk about the opening and closing sessions.

PW has a longer report of the opening session but I want to talk about one small part, but a part that ruined the entire session and quite honestly, clouded my entire experience at ALA,  the appearance of the Sharjah Book Authority CEO Ahmed bin Rakkad Al Ameri. This is all PW said about that, and it was buried in a paragraph with others:

At the welcome ceremony, speakers included Illinois Library Association president Carolyn Ciesla, Chicago Public Library commissioner Chris Brown, and Sharjah Book Authority CEO Ahmed bin Rakkad Al Ameri, who reminded the assembly that “knowledge should move freely across borders.” Dan Montgomery, wrapping up his first year as ALA executive director, praised Helmick and other volunteer leaders for their dedicated efforts, “not made any easier by the times we’re in.” 

First, our president, a nonbinary person giggled with excitement as they were introducing this man without telling us who it was at first. And then he came out. Here is what I said on Bluesky:

Not sure why ALA gave the mic and opening session stage to the librarian from UAE, a country that does not have intellectual freedom. I will make sure someone in charge has to answer this question.

To say I was incensed at him walking on the stage under the pretense that he was there to celebrate the libraries' 100th anniversary and to advertise that they were hosting the International Book Fair, would be an understatement. This is a place where being gay and especially being nonbinary like the person introducing this man is ILLEGAL. This is a place (UAE) where freedom of the press and intellectual freedom are squashed by rule of law. Freedom House listing for UAE gives them a score of 18/100 for Freedom. 18 out of 100! I am not exaggerating.

Why are we, the ALA giving precious time on the microphone to a man who got up there and praised his government, a government that is suppressing free speech. A government who are actively queer people existing. WHAT ARE WE DOING? These are people related to those who are doing the same thing here, in our country, the people the ALA and all of us have been exhaustively fighting for years. People who some library workers have lost their jobs standing up to.

I have no problem mentioning them with the many, many others in the library world who are celebrating milestones this year-- and there are a lot. I have no problem with him being on the welcome slide listing all of the international librarians that were attending. And I have no problem with them having a booth for the International Book Fair because that is an event that library people might want to know about. 

BUT to give this man a chance to speak at the mic, and give no one else that space, that is a choice I cannot get behind.  It is a slap in the face to every one of us who is fighting for intellectual freedom every single day.

Because I am me, I stopped paying attention to anything else after this and spent most of my night reaching out to others involved in ALA decision making and those officially working to protect intellectual freedom. Surprise, surprise (sarcasm) not a single one had any idea who okayed him to speak. And for a while many of these people were also surprised he got mic time. And then, but the next day, these same people (and there were a few) got back to me with sanitized responses that claimed things like:

  • He was speaking because it was a 100th anniversary for them and they are hosting the International Book Fair with ALA is a partner with.
    • My responses-- they have a booth, he doesn't;t need the mic too; you put a bunch of anniversaries on the screen but only he talked, many of which were major ALA specific initiatives.
  • They want to highlight the huge international support of ALA's 150th and he spoke for all International attendees
    • Again, they listed at least 4 major international attendees and any one of them could have spoken instead. 
  • While we might not agree with his country's politics, we cannot blame him for that. 
    • Okay this one made me mad because that is not the point. He can do whatever he wants and has to follow the rules of his country, that is his choice. BUT WHAT ABOUT OUR CHOICE? We actually have the freedom to make a choice to NOT support those who suppress intellectual freedom.

I need to be clear here-- asking someone to speak at the ALA Opening Session, giving them the mic, that is a choice. Not allowing someone to speak is also a choice. ALA made a choice that is 100% counter to everything we claim to believe in. I will not forget this. I will not stop talking about this to all of you and ALA people. And I will not stay silent.

As you can imagine, I heard nothing back after I countered these arguments. My friend Kelly Jensen told me all you can do is challenge them but in the end you will not get a response and also she said no one will admit who invited him. That is what I am finding out. I also found out along my journey of talking to people over the conference, that folks I thought were involved in major planning committees were relieved of their duties a few months ago. Hmmmmmm

Look, I have no proof but everyone knows ALA's finances are a mess. I am guessing a pay out from the UAE to ALA was involved. And look, if you are going to basically take a bribe-- because that is what it is when you go against everything you "believe in" and are fighting for in exchange for money. Let us talk in front of everyone with your blessing and endorsement and stay quiet because we paid you. Again, no proof but why else will no one go on the record to explain why he got the mic.

As you can tell, I am still upset about all of this, and quite honestly, it clouded my experience at the closing session which was added after the closing speaker cancelled:

As the United States celebrates 250 years of democracy, ALA leadership – current President Sam Helmick, President Elect Maria McCauley, Director of the Office of Intellectual Freedom Sarah Lamdan, and Executive Director Dan Montgomery – will discuss the issues at the heart of the profession: librarians as vanguards of intellectual freedom, information literacy and civic engagement, and libraries as welcoming spaces that provide a sense of community and belonging for patrons.

I will start my comments here by saying Sarah Lamdan is 100% better than her predecessor who thankfully retired. I will not say her name but I will say we had some clashes. All she did was say no when challenged to actually fight for our intellectual freedom. Lamdan is doing much better. One of the best ways to see that, as soon as the former head of OIF retired, magically Kelly Jensen (the leading journalist fighting for our intellectual freedom) was included in the ALA's fight against censorship.

Before the conference began, I was hopeful about this conversation but as you can imagine, after that Opening Session experience, I was less so. Well I was not disappointed in my lowered expectations. This conversation had NO TEETH. Instead of interrogating the state of censorship in America, instead of rallying us to fight with renewed energy, instead of giving us things we can do to work together both in our communities and across the country, instead, they gave us a conversation about JOY?!?!? 

They wanted us to joyfully rally our comunities about all the great things libraries do. She wanted if to focus on our joy of serving those patrons. They wanted us to look at joy as an act of resistance.

This last one mad me even more mad, but I was too tired to put that on socials. We need actual resistance, I don't care if this attack on all of us is taking an emotional toll on us. It is not taking an emotional toll on enough of us. Too many library workers say things to me like-- well that is their problem or my community is fine. People, it is not. I am on the ILA's Intellectual Freedom committee-- in a  state where book banning is technically illegal-- I can tell you our meetings are filled with libraries needing help (school and public) as their freedoms are being eroded. 

Joy is not the resistance we need. The other side of this debate has all the time and money and federal political support to keep pudding away at our freedoms. They ar not going to stop. And with power and money int heir corner, JOY will never be enough. In fact, this argument by ALA leadership that we should take a break, deal with our emotional health, and not do anything other than be joyful is a kick in the gut to those of us engaged in this fight. What we need from ALA is a clearer, stronger, and quite honestly, more anger fueled game plan to really fight back. What we got instead was some touchy feely nonsense.

Lamdan also said we should lean on others if we need it, but again, too many library workers are ignoring the problems either because they think they are not relevant to them or because they hide hoping people don't go after them. But first, everyone is in this fight whether we want to be or not. And second, ignoring the issue is what got us in so deep to begin with. How can we lean on others when you are not rallying them to help us.

Look, I clearly had a lot of thoughts about ALA's messaging. And they are very critical. But I went to this conference knowing I might feel this way. I went as a member who writes for ALA's publishing division. And I went and am a member because I truly believe if you want to fight to make something better you do not abstain. No. Instead you stay and become a thorn in their sides. You fight from within. I have been doing that for years and I will continue. And I do this with the knowledge that I have colleagues on the inside who must stay silent publicly but appreciate that I can fight for them. 

I promise to all of you, I will keep fighting and I will keep being a member. They are not going to be able to get rid of me that easily. I know many of them read this blog because it gets back to me through other channels. So to those in charge, I say-- If you thought I was fighting before, you haven't seen anything yet.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

ALA 2026: Wrap Up Post 1 of 2 (updated 7/1 with Read N Rave Titles)

I usually post in the morning but I needed a moment after being at ALA Annual since Friday and having worked 8 days (and counting without a break)

Today, I am going to focus on the things I did where I can share things you can use. Tomorrow I will write about the Opening and closing sessions and link to a few reports from other outlets.

But I do want to let you know, there are a few resources that will be ready in a week or so and I did have some meetings that will lead to more posts and information coming over the next few weeks.

Let me start on Friday at the Library Insights Preconference. The things said on my panel are all things you have heard before here on RA for All. But I do want to talk about this panel and provide the info from what I am calling the most useful handout of the conference-- Tell me What to Publish: What Librarians Wish Publishers Knew:

What are readers asking for—and what aren’t they finding? In our closing conversation, librarians from across the country share insights from their circulation data, collection development priorities, and daily patron requests. We’ll look at what the metadata is revealing about genre trends and where publishers may be missing opportunities. From urban systems to rural branches, these experts will identify gaps in the marketplace, shifts in reading habits, and emerging categories ready for attention. Designed for publishers seeking actionable direction, this session delivers a rare, unfiltered look at what librarians truly wish you’d publish next.

Ann LehueDirector, Collection and Metadata Development, Ingram

Christina ChatelSchool Library Media Specialist, Boulan Park and Smith Middle Schools

Dr. Corinthia PricePresident, International Association of School Librarianship

Stephen SposatoCollection Development Manager, Chicago Public Library 

Click here for more info on the panelists.  

Ann from Ingram Content Group's Library Services made a two sided handout. One side was a great resource for the publishers. It's on how to  maximize sales to libraries and gives them lots of advice on what we like to see and the resources we use. On the bottom, says, "Libraries rely heavily on reviews for their push casing decisions." After that heading it has the link to all of the journals with their age conus and the link to where they submit for review.

The other side is a document entitled, "Publishing Trends and Gaps" and this is what the panel focused on. I have recreated that bulleted list here for all to see for free, with attribution to Ingram.

THIS HANDOUT IS RA AND COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT GOLD!!!!!

Please click through. These are the areas that are in demand at libraries for all ages. Please look through this list and use it to make displays and pass on to your children department and the people who order books. I am also hanging on to this for my end of the year reports. 

I want to link the info on the handout with a few other things I saw at the conference. Publishers (especially Harper Collins) were making sure to mention all of the titles they were now including in Large Print. There are a lot more than previous years. Also, speaking of HarperCollins, they had an entire section at their booth with the covers of audio ARCs available through Net Galley and QR codes to go directly to them. Here is that page. Multiple formats with ease were everywhere at the conference and I know all of that is great for us.

The woman who was one of the co-founders of the Young Teen Lit movement (also in the handout) was on the panel and talked at length about the issue shared their website: https://youngteenlit.com/. Go there to follow them and the authors and books they recommend. After seeing this panel Friday and was primed to notice the books that are being marketed to fill this gap while I was on the show floor. 

Now on to other things.

I want to thank everyone who came to my signing at the S&S Booth. Many of you said you saw it here on the blog. We had 80 books and I had 1 hour to sign them. I never imaged I would have 80 people come, let alone have one of those EPIC ALA links that has to be split by the booth, but I did. I met so many of you and signed those books in 70 minutes. Thank you all. Here are some photos of the line and me signing that Lila Denning took. And thank you to Melissa Croce and her assistant El. who ran the appearance.  They worked hard all conference. I know this because I went back to offer to help them with other things. 




On Sunday, Lila and I had a huddle (mentioned in this post with links to Lila's quick slide show of 5 Tips for Book Displays). Readers of this blog know what I talked about. We had 20+ people show up for a space ment for 6-8, including someone from a display shelving company. The biggest comments were that it should have been a panel. I agree. Maybe next year we will do that. 

Also welcome to my new readers from that event.

I also attended the Booklist/LibraryReads Read N Rave on Sunday. Booklist now has the blog post up with all of the titles here. Please consider voting for them for LibraryReads.

Finally, I got to see Tananarive Due on her LibraryReads panel, Monday. We were able to hug and celebrate our Stoker Award wins and take a selfie for our wonderful editor Joe Monti. I was so proud to see the room so excited for Due's new book--Mazywood. I have turned in my Booklist review and spoiler alert-- it is great and you can read my pre-review thoughts here. But when she spoke about it specifically, she talked about moving from the pain and trauma of writing The Reformatory and how Mazywood leads with joy. It really does, but I will say, joy for Horror people, maybe not everyone's idea of joy, because it both a novel of early Hollywood and the Black experience in it AND a good old-fashioned 1980s survival monster horror story. 

Here are photos from the panel and of me and Due celebrating our joy! Oh and a bonus pic of me and Lila in the audience (early Monday morning.)







That's enough for today. As I mentioned above, I have somethings to say about the Opening and closing ceremony and my overall experience. I will also link to reports from others.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

My ALA Schedule Including Booth Signing

As promised here yesterday, today's post is all about my personal schedule at ALA. Please note, this is not complete. I am not including a few panels I hope to make it to, rather I will only include places I KNOW I will be at during specific times. 

Please though, if you see me, stop me. No matter how busy I look. I want to meet you if you want to meet me. I will have RA for All pens and stickers for anyone who asks. And, since I will go home every night, I will not run out!

I have highlighted the 2 events where I am the presenter.

Friday, June 26, 2026:

Library Insights Pre-Conference
McCormick Place West – Room W471A (West Building Level 4)
8:30 am- 3:30 pm

This is a ticketed event which I wrote about in detail in this post. I will be in that room most of the day, but as soon as it is over, I will head to registration.

McCormick Place W375 CDE Skyline
4-5:30pm

I will be outside mingling with people before it begins. I will also be sitting close to the front because my dear friend Carolyn Ciesla is the current President of ILA and she will be on stage to welcome you all.

After the opening session, I will probably skip the exhibit open since I will have been there all day and I have a dinner to get to.

Saturday, June 27, 2026:


Location: McCormick Place, W 375 A Skyline
9:00 AM - 10:30 AM

After that I will be in the Exhibit Hall visiting vendors and publishers until MY SIGNING.

Location: Booth 3112
11:30 AM - 12:30 PM 
    Becky will be signing copies of her Bram Stoker award-winning horror anthology, "Why I Love Horror". Come grab a complimentary copy, get it signed, and meet Becky!
    Also I will have the QR code to buy my shirt (which I will be wearing for the signing) from Greg's Threads of Dread
    Please note: this is your only chance to get a free copy of WHY I LOVE HORROR but it is not your only chance to get your copy signed. If you have your copy, I will sign it at any time. I have different stickers for that.

    After the signing, I am heading a few blocks away to do to the celebration of the Life and Legacy of Fobazi Ettarh. I wrote about that event here including all the location and time details. I hope to see many of you there. 

    When I return from the memorial, I will be around for a few more hours. I am keeping my options open though, especially because I don't know who I will be catching up with from that event.

    But later that night I will be at the off site ticketed event--

    Location: Off Site, American Writers Museum, 180 N. Michigan Ave., 2nd Fl
    8:00 PM - 10:00 PM

    The Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction are celebrated every year at ALA's Annual Conference, this year held in Chicago. Join us for a literary night on Saturday, June 27 from 8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. CT at the American Writers Museum as we honor this year's winners: A Guardian and a Thief by Megha Majumdar and Things in Nature Merely Grow by Yiyun Li. The award ceremony will conclude with a light reception and book signing.

    I will be there as a former committee members for this award to celebrate the work of my colleagues.

    Sunday, June 28, 2026:

    Location: McCormick Place, W 193 A
    9:00 AM - 10:00 AM

    9:00 AM - 10:00 AM

    Isn't it romantic? Meet bestselling authors of romance and other love stories at this popular program moderated by Melissa DeWild, Reviews Director, Library Journal. A panel of four writers from a variety of publishers will discuss their writing lives, their inspirations and processes, and their forthcoming titles. Advance copies will be provided to attendees (subject to availability). A book signing will follow. Authors include Emily Rath ("Devour Me" | Avon/HarperCollins), Cara Tanamachi ("Kiss, Marry, Kill" | Forever/Hachette), Iman Hariri-Kia ("Once in a Timeline" | Cosmo Reads/Sourcebooks), and Lauren Rowe ("Chasing the Rush" | Kensington Publishing).

    This panel is moderated by my editor at LJ, Melissa DeWild. I will be there to support her. 

    Connect Lounge Huddle: To facilitate discovery and circulation, how can libraries make their reading collection displays more engaging?

    Location: McCormick Place, ALA Connect Lounge, Hall F2 Lobby
    11:00 AM - 11:20 AM

    The humble book display is often not used to its fullest as the discovery tool it can be. And we often forget how much it can drive increased circulation. But in a world where patrons use the library as both a physical and digital space, and with an understanding that patrons crave interactive experiences, discussion leaders Becky Spratford and Lila Denning will share their decades of experience as librarians and trainers to help huddle participants break down how to create displays that spark conversation, bring patrons of all ages into the library, and have them leave not only with a few good books to read but also a plan to return soon to get some more.

    My colleague (and house guest for ALA Annual) Lila Denning and I will be hosting this conversation about how to make your book displays more effective and we don't mean by adding decorations. Come chat with us. We can even stick around for a bit after if you want to keep chatting, but we do have to get to the next panel before it ends at Noon...

    Location: McCormick Place, W 193 B
    11:00 AM - 12:00 PM

    This program will present bestselling authors of mysteries and thrillers moderated by Susan Maguire, Senior Editor, Collection Management and Library Outreach, Booklist. A panel of four writers from a variety of publishers will discuss their writing lives, their inspirations and processes, and their forthcoming titles. Advance copies will be provided to attendees (subject to availability). A book signing will follow. Authors include Daniel Kraus ("The Sixth Nik" | Saga Press/Simon & Schuster), Nina Simon ("My Sister Is Going to Kill Me" | William Morrow/HarperCollins), Cynthia Pelayo ("Something Followed Us Home: Tales of Latiné Horror" | Primero Sueno Press/Simon & Schuster), and Sara Paretsky ("Bad Company" | Minotaur Books/Macmillan Publishers).

    Not only is this panel being moderated by my Booklist Editor Susan Maguire, but it features two of my real life friends, Cynthia Pelayo and Daniel Kraus. I will be there before it ends.

    Location: McCormick Place, W 195
    1:00 PM - 2:00 PM

    Collection development and readers' advisory specialists from across the country will RAVE about their favorite forthcoming READS in this lively presentation brought to you by LibraryReads and Booklist. Join us and find your patrons' next favorite reads or add to that ever-growing TBR pile. List of books will be available on booklistonline.com after the event.

    This is a NOT TO MISS event every single year. Also Susan again! I have done this more than once myself. It is a gauntlet, but super fun. I am very excited to be in the audience these days. Please note, it used to always be on Monday but it was moved to Sunday this year. Please mark your schedules

    I will also be stopping by the booth signings of friends Maurice Broaddus (Booth 2521 between 12 and 1) and Grace Daly (booth 3226E between 2:30 and 3). 

    Like the other days, I have some panels marked to attend, but I cannot 100% promise I will be at those and I don't want to disappoint someone who make a point to go there to see me. 

    Monday, June 29, 2026:

    Last day!!! And again, one of the primer events for the conference in my opinion...

    Location: McCormick Place, W 181 A B C
    8:30 AM - 10:00 AM
    Join the Adult Library Marketing Association and LibraryReads for their annual adult author panel. You'll hear 5 top authors talk about their upcoming releases, and get print galleys. Please find the RSVP link on our website at at LibraryReads.org/events, so we can make sure we have galleys and swag on hand.

    Featured Authors:
    • Meg Anderson,  The Memory of Borrowed Books, Sourcebooks 
    • Bonnie Jo Campbell, The Spirits, W. W. Norton & Company
    • Tananarive Due, Mazywood, Simon & Schuster
    • Laleh Khadivi, Female Life on Planet Earth, HarperCollins
    • Jeneva Rose, Sometimes I Scare Myself , Blackstone Publishing
    You do not want to miss this early morning start as Tananarive Due and I are reunited after we both won the Bram Stoker Award for my book. We will have a mini celebratory victory dance. But seriously, this is always great panel and you can get ARCs for all of the authors. And I am not just saying this because I am a LibraryReads Ambassador. Hosted by Rebecca Vnuk, LibraryReds Executive Director. 

    After this, I will be around. I will probably be spending the time after this panel in the exhibit hall before it closes. And after that, panels.

    Finally, yesterday, it was announced that Wayne Brady had to cancel for the closing session, but they did add this (which I will be at):

    4:00 PM- 5:00 PM

    As the United States celebrates 250 years of democracy, ALA leadership – current President Sam Helmick, President Elect Maria McCauley, Director of the Office of Intellectual Freedom Sarah Lamdan, and Executive Director Dan Montgomery – will discuss the issues at the heart of the profession: librarians as vanguards of intellectual freedom, information literacy and civic engagement, and libraries as welcoming spaces that provide a sense of community and belonging for patrons.

    I am intrigued by what they plan to talk about. With the awful former director of OIF finally retired (she was never strong enough fighting against censorship in my opinion and I have not hidden that opinion from her), I am hoping to hear some stronger language. I have no hopes though. I will come with an open mind, but know that FOR SURE, I will report on this one.

    Okay so that is the bare bones schedule of where I will be over the next few days. Again, come say hello and I will give you a pen and a sticker. Put a copy of my book in your face and I will sign it. Just find me and say hi.

    And those of you not attending...I've got you. Reports will follow. In fact, here is a reminder of my upcoming blogging schedule:
    • 6/26 and 29: Blog is off while I attend ALA but check bluesky for updates
    • 6/30 (later in the day though, not AM) and 7/1: Detailed recaps of what I saw and learned plus links to reports others on things I missed.
    • 7/2: Come back before the July 4th holiday because I will be linking to my LJ Horror Genre Preview in the July issue and I will have a giveaway of the upcoming second Never Whistle at Night anthology (on both blogs).
    • 7/3: That is the July 4th Holiday observed so RA for All is off
    • 7/6: This one is exciting-- I will be posting and writing about NoveList's brand new RA Competencies. They were released last week, but I want to give it the eyes it deserves and that means waiting until AFTER ALA Annual and the July 4th Holiday.
    Back Tuesday afternoon with some recaps.

    Wednesday, June 24, 2026

    Get Ready for ALA Annual Even If You Are Not Attending: Including Becky's Blogging Schedule and ALA Coverage Plan

    ALA Annual starts Friday and I know not everyone who reads this is going, but (and I tell you from experience when I missed the conference) the conference provides resources that can be used even if you are staying home. And I am here to help everyone, but especially those who are not going to be there to get the most out of ALA Annual and the opportunities it makes available. 

    I will have a series of posts--today, tomorrow, and then the blog will be off while I attend ALA but back early next week with in-depth recaps leading up to the July 4th Holiday. (Plus my Horror Genre Preview which will go live July 1.)

    It all begins today with me sharing resources.

    First up, PW has extensive previews. Go here and then scroll to the bottom for more preview links. And then keep following PW all conference long by using their "libraries" tag. They will have recaps throughout. I love the coverage because I cannot be everywhere myself and I use the recaps to see what I missed. But, if you are busy, especially if you are covering for others who are attending ALA Annual, don't worry, I will have a roundup of all the PW coverage as well.

    Library Journal also has coverage. Use their ALA Annual 2026 tag to see it all. Of special note however is their Aisle by Aisle Guide of the Exhibit Hall. Even if you are not at ALA you can see the deals, coupons, and get to know some vendors you might not be aware of. You can shop from home-- literally. Browse what is available and being promoted and get in touch with the vendors. I know for a fact that they honor the conference specials even if you did not go, as long as you tell them you were browsing from afar during the conference.

    Also, Sourcebooks and LJ always provide a Galley Guide for ALA Annual. From the guide's intro

    "Highlights of attending the ALA Annual conference this year include a multitude of books to discover on the exhibit floor. Library Journal’s Galley Guide lists the many ARCs on offer. It also includes an In Booth signing schedule arranged by day and time, so attendees can keep up with author visits across the conference. LJ’s Galley Guide includes adult titles but be sure to check in with all the publishers for YA and children’s book giveaways and signings. Thank you to Sourcebooks (Booth No. 3021) for sponsoring this catalog of titles to know, read, and share."

    I have written extensively about how EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU can use the ALA Galley Guide as a RA Tool. Here is my post about it from last year. I use this guide more for planning, displays, and collection development than I do for using it to run around and get free books. Speaking of, if you are attending, don't be that person with the wagon or multiple tote bags hoarding all the books. Here is a post I wrote ten years ago about this disgusting habit (and it still holds true). But back to the Galley Guide as a resource, please read my post from last year where I outline 4 ways the guide is an amazing and useful resource, all of which nothing to do with being there.

    And again, click here to access this year's Galley Guide. This is the number one best resource for all library workers who do collection development and RA that comes out of ALA Annual each year.

    That's all for today, but here is the schedule of what you can expect going forward through 7/6:

    • 6/25: Becky's Schedule so you can know where to find me, including my specific appearances
    • 6/26 and 29: Blog is off while I attend ALA but check bluesky for updates
    • 6/30 and 7/1: Detailed recaps of what I saw and learned plus links to reports others on things I missed.
    • 7/2: Come back before the July 4th holiday because I will be linking to my LJ Horror Genre Preview in the July issue and I will have a giveaway of the upcoming second Never Whistle at Night anthology (on both blogs).
    • 7/3: That is the July 4th Holiday observed so RA for All is off
    • 7/6: This one is exciting-- I will be posting and writing about NoveList's brand new RA Competencies. They were released last week, but I want to give it the eyes it deserves and that means waiting until AFTER ALA Annual and the July 4th Holiday.
    As you can see, I have a lot planned. I hope you come back and check it all out. Please don't forget, I have a link to "Feedrabbit" in the right gutter over my logo on every page of the blog. You can use that to get an emailed version of every post. It is the best way to stay up to date.

    It is going to be a gauntlet over the next 10 days, but I've got you. Back tomorrow with Becky specific information. 

    Tuesday, June 23, 2026

    Are Public Libraries Becoming Children’s Libraries? A Report on the Unintended Consequences of Censorship via 404 Media

    I talk about censorship and preserving the Freedom to Read here often, but not as often as Kelly Jensen tirelessly covers the issue over on Book Riot. Click here for the Book Riot censorship archives. I have pointed to her coverage many times. [Use my censorship tag for examples]. 

    What I love about how Kelly has been covering the deterioration of our Freedom to Read is that she doesn't just report on the actions, she writes articles about what these censorship actions do, how they affect everyone in our country, and how they are changing the entire library landscape no matter where you live. I hate saying I love this about her coverage because I hate that she has to do it, but I am thankful we have her working on it for 6 years and counting.

    She is inspiring others to look at the implications of these challenges and the laws that have sprung up. She is also inspiring others to use FOIA for good. The book banners FOIA us all the time, but people like Kelly, and now 404 Media, are using FOPIA to fight against censorship.

    [Side note, I am on the Illinois Library Association Intellectual Freedom Committee and we are talking about creating a program about this exactly. Too many libraries are afraid of getting FOIA requests because usually it is from nefarious people, but people like Kelly Jensen and 404 Media are using FOIA to help us protect intellectual freedom and to expose how horrible the book banners are. We are trying to flip the script and remind those of us on the side of protecting intellectual freedom that FOIA is there for everyone!]

    Speaking of 404 Media, they just released a long piece about the implications of censorship. The title, "Are Public Libraries Becoming Children’s Libraries?" is provocative, but the article goes into a very deep dive here about how public library collections are going to be decimated over time. Specifically because libraries are complying with laws that say they have to move children's' material that non-professionals (citizens) have deemed "adult" to the adult sections, not only will kids and teens not find those books, not check them out, meaning that they will get weeded for non used, but also, adult sections will become filled with kids materials, turning adults off from browsing.

    There is a lot more here, and they have looked at libraries all across America. They have shared the records they have obtained via FOIA, including collection policies with the track changes turned on. 

    Please read this article and aways follow Kelly Jensen's censorship coverage on Book Riot, Specifically this article which 404 used for their piece as well. And please, fight, do not give in to the book banners. Our biggest issue is our supportive public has been unwilling to fight for us as hard or in as an organized a fashion as those who want to stop any of us from having intellectual freedom. 

    As wee head into the ALA Conference starting up on Friday, this is the issue we should be focusing on. Fuck AI and all the programs about how we need to embrace it. We still haven't stopped our intellectual Freedom from being undermined. And, in fact, it is only going to get worse according to the 404 Media report.

    Speaking of ALA Annual, I will be back tomorrow with information on how everyone-- whether you are joining us in Chicago or not-- can get resources from the conference. 

    Monday, June 22, 2026

    Choose Your Own Book Club: A Guest Post by Matthew Tessmer

    ALA starts later this week, and one of my favorite things about ALA and PLA is the chance to meet my readers. A few years ago, at PLA in Columbus, OH, Matthew Tessmer introduced himself to me and Robin. I have kept in touch with Matthew in the ensuing years, even provided training to his library system. 

    Recently, I invited Matthew to share his experience with his awesome “Choose Your Own Book Club” with all of you.

    And I chose to run it, today, the beginning of the week leading up to the start of ALA Annual to remind all of you that I would love to chat with you at ALA Annual as well. Remember, you know what I look like, but I do not know what you look like. Later this week I will post my planned scheduled so you can find me, but seriously, anytime you see me, stop me. I will have stickers and pens for anyone who does.

    If you are not coming to ALA, please also remember that you can reach out to me anytime via email. Ask a question or tell me about something you are doing at your library. It might lead to you sharing with others here on the blog like it did for Matthew.

    Speaking of, take it away Matthew...

    Thanks to Becky for the opportunity to talk about a reader’s advisory program for adults I’ve been having success with at my library! The program is a free choice book club we host at the library called “Choose Your Own Book Club.” Here’s the description we publicize: “Connect with fellow readers and grow your reading list in this casual book discussion group. Join us to talk about the books you've read or are currently reading.” At the program, each participant gets the floor to discuss their reading life, which usually consists of recounting their most recent reads and why they did or didn’t enjoy them. We’ve grown into a lovely group representing a wide range of demographics and reading tastes. I’m excited to talk about it here not because of how nice of a group or program it is, but for the way it inspires and challenges me to reflect on and put into practice the great RA ideas I have learned from this blog and other like-minded resources.

    First, I have found that this program works well to establish and promote the library as the place for bookish conversation. Recently, Becky highlighted our problem of assuming readers know we offer book suggestions instead of actively working to show them. We have made that mistake at my library, too - this program is one of our ways to fix it that aligns with other steps we have taken to better reach our community. One of our long-term goals the past few years has been to strengthen our marketing, especially when it comes to our program offerings. When we were considering how to strengthen our reader services, a natural extension was to create this program focused exclusively on readers’ advisory. The entire program is focused on “cultivating an atmosphere of conversation around books.” Participants get the chance to take the stage and share their book recs and commiserate on reads that didn’t hit the mark. These discussions often lead into some conversation starters. For example, one of the readers expressed an interest in reading more “classics” - this turned into a discussion of what the term “classic” means and led to each member sharing their criteria for “classics” and a book recommendation. Importantly, we don’t stop the conversation when the program ends. I love to tell the program participants that they can keep the conversation going at any time by talking to any library staff person at our service desks, and to encourage their friends who can’t make the program time especially to come do what we love most - talk books!


    Second, in addition to taking the opportunity to discuss my personal reading life, I use this program as basically a live display of books I want to highlight and “unshelve” from the collection. My practice of doing this has evolved. At first, I was pretty strict about developing a monthly theme for the materials I would pull out of the collection to highlight. But as Becky has pointed out, limiting the selections in this way doesn’t actually serve the readers in this program. Instead, I share monthly “books that have caught my interest” so that my choices can be more inclusive and more of the program’s readers can be drawn to this live display.


    Third, I would be doing the program participants a disservice if I didn’t approach the bookish conversations and unshelved books through an anti-racist lens that elevates and celebrates marginalized voices. I wish I could say that this point goes without saying, but between the active threats to the freedom to read and the complacency of those who (wrongly) think reading and RA service can be apolitical, loudly continuing anti-racist and inclusive reader services is essential. In this program, it looks like making sure that inclusive book display procedures are followed for the books I unshelve. It means getting comfortable with being uncomfortable and sharing additional information and book suggestions when a participant discusses a title like American Dirt. It means making and keeping personal reading goals to read widely and diversely. Being actively anti-racist is the table stakes for being a part of the solution instead of the problem in librarianship. I’m grateful for the part this program plays in keeping me committed and accountable to anti-racist reader services.


    And fourth, this program has broadened my view of RA service from transactional reading suggestions towards a wide-ranging service that advances everyday readers’ autonomy. As our readerly community has formed, we spend as much time discussing our reading lives as we do talking about the reading material. These conversations can involve: 1) reflecting on reading tastes as a whole and what impacts them (previous reads, time, place, mood), 2) whether or not certain reading choices make for a “real” reader (both audiobooks and romance are, in fact, real reading!) and 3) affirming the choices readers make for their reading lives (DNF that book if it isn’t working for you!). Each of these are an example of promoting readerly autonomy, as explored in a panel presentation at ALA Annual 2025 by Rutgers Assistant Professor E. E. Lawrence. Here, RA is an autonomy-enabling service that supports patrons in making the choices that steer their own reading lives.


    I’ve learned so much from RAforAll over the years, so it’s a dream to get a chance to share this program here. While I don’t think there’s anything ground-breaking being done in this program, I hope it inspires you to continue to reflect on your current programs and services to leisure readers. I know I’ll be back here tomorrow to read and learn something new!


    --Matthew Tessmer

    Public Services Librarian
    Albert Lea Public Library